The AMSS (UK) Fifth Annual Conference Fiqh Today: Muslims as Minorities

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Abdul-Rehman Malik

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Abstract

Traditional fiqh is facing a new challenge: formulating a suitable fiqh for
minority Muslim communities. In this spirit, the Association of Muslim
Social Scientists (AMSS [UK]) in conjunction with the International
Institute of Islamic Thought, The Muslim College, and Q-News Media,
convened its fifth annual conference, “Fiqh Today: Muslims as Minorities,”
at the University of Westminster (London) during February 21-22, 2004.
Anas Al-Shaikh-Ali, AMSS (UK) Executive Committee Chair, set
out the vision in his opening remarks: A genuine fiqh for minority
Muslims requires a collective engagement between social scientists and
Shari`ah scholars “in the wider public arena.” He challenged participants
to work for a “comprehensive methodology of minority fiqh” drawing on
the past, but not being afraid to be innovative.
Keynote speaker Mustafa Ceric, Grand Mufti of Bosnia-Herzegovina,
maintained that while he did not believe in a minority fiqh per se, he readily
accepted the position that Muslims living as political minorities often are
better able to fulfill their religious obligations than Muslims elsewhere. He
posited a vision of Muslims in Europe that recognized their unique historic
position and contribution to Europe, which he sees as a place of interaction
rather than of confrontation. After discussing the interdependence of cultures
and the need for balance and tolerance, he considered present diagnoses of
the intellectual pathologies of Muslim and European societies and concluded
by challenging Muslim minorities to see themselves as driving Islam’s civilizational
wheel. He also called on Europe to institutionalize Islam and for
Muslims in Europe to come together within a universal worldview.
Al-Shaikh-Ali awarded the AMSS (UK) 2003 Lifetime Achievement
Award posthumously to Edward Said. Michel Abdul Messih, QC, eminent
lawyer, Palestinian activist, and close friend of Said, accepted it on his
behalf. Zaki Badawi spoke of how Said’s works changed academia and ...

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